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MNN.COM › Food › Healthy Eating
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    What's this?
New bitterness blocker makes food seem sweeter
Scientists report an advance toward a high-tech version of Mary Poppins' solution: It's not a spoonful of sugar to help the stuff go down, but a 'bitterness blocker.'

By

LiveScience
Tue, Mar 29 2011 at 1:23 PM
 3

Related Topics:

Research & Innovation, Science

Photo: timsa/iStockphoto

Swallowing cold medicine or drinking diet beverages could become a more pleasant experience thanks to a new compound that blocks taste buds' ability to detect bitter flavors.
 
The compound, whose discovery was reported today at the American Chemical Society's National Meeting and Exposition in Anaheim, Calif., could be added to foods and beverages to make them more palatable. [Read: Why Some People Crave More Salt]
 
"A lot of people are very sensitive to bitter taste in medicines, calorie-free sweeteners, and foods," Ioana Ungureanu, a research scientist at Givaudan Flavors Corporation in Cincinnati, said in a statement. "We'd like to be able to make their diets more enjoyable by masking the off-putting flavors of bitterness. Blocking these flavors we call 'off-notes' could help consumers eat healthier and more varied diets. It could encourage them to switch to non-calorie soft drinks and help children and seniors swallow bitter-tasting medications."
 
The bitterness blocker, known as GIV3616, is not the first compound capable of masking bitter tastes from the tongue. That honor belongs to GIV3727, which improves the taste of artificial sweeteners such as saccharin and sucralose.
 
GIV3616 is more potent than its predecessor and dissolves more quickly in food and beverages, Ungureanu said.
 
As people have become more concerned about the amount of salt, fat and sugar in processed foods, interest in flavor blockers has jumped, according to the American Chemical Society. Instead of masking bad or bitter flavors with salty, fatty ingredients, food manufacturers are interested in using chemicals that interfere with the taste receptors on the tongue, leaving them temporarily unable to detect unpleasant flavors.
 
This article was reprinted with permission from LiveScience.
 
Related on LiveScience:
  • 8 Reasons Our Waistlines Are Expanding
  • 7 Diet Tricks That Really Work
  • Good Food Gone Bad
MNN homepage photo: princessdlaf/iStockphoto

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Comments: 3
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anonymous
Livefoodie Apr 03 2011 at 3:47 PM

This is going to be another "miracle" product that turns out to be some sort of carcinogen *ahem* msg, aspartame, fluoride.

I'm also happy that the diet soda link was placed in there, kudos.
Stay healthy.

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ronda
ronda Apr 03 2011 at 1:14 AM

Not the answer.

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mamachen's picture
mamachen Apr 02 2011 at 11:36 AM

If we want people to eat healthier foods, then why would putting another chemical additive into unhealthy foods be a solution? Diet soda? Worse for you than regular soda. Why not just encourage people to stay away from processed food and get back to eating what humans are supposed to eat: fresh fruits, vegetables, grains, and protein.

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